I mean for automation and the end of our work force where is @Donkey Kong to tell us we are all screwed?
Also Castle your health insurance is $9 bucks a month?
Jesus.
Mine is $120. And even the cheapo plan is like $80.
My deductible is $1200 though and my max oop is $2k. I hit that usually in the first two months thanks to Crohn's meds. And the rebate covers 90% of it.
0
amateurhourOne day I'll be professionalhourThe woods somewhere in TennesseeRegistered Userregular
and you're all doing the thing where you line item every aspect of one side and only consider the initial purchase cost of the other side
robot employees require maintenance
in a dusty warehouse, probably constant maintenance
Dang, I have relevant experience here. We bought a waterjet table a couple years ago. It was $120k. It's incredible, you tell it piece shape, size, number, whatever, it cuts a 16x24 sheet of product into amazing designs. Push button, get cut pastries.
Until someone hits the USB port where you upload programs and snaps it off. Custom piece. $85. 3 days downtime.
Or one of the stepper motors goes bad. Also custom. $750. 4 days from Spain.
The water filter has to be replaced monthly. $60.
Someone dropped a stack of pans on one of the cutting surfaces, it's a removable metal frame with very thin blades crisscrossing. $600.
The nozzles for it are $40 apiece. They last about 10 hours.
At 1000 hours, the pump requires a full rebuild. $10,000 in parts and labor to have someone do that.
Some of this is offset though. Like with Yeti coolers they can make like 10K of them before they have to replace the mold. They then crank out another 1K they sell as "blemished" models (that are 100% the same minus some surface imperfections) which offsets the cost of the new mold.
and you're all doing the thing where you line item every aspect of one side and only consider the initial purchase cost of the other side
robot employees require maintenance
in a dusty warehouse, probably constant maintenance
Dang, I have relevant experience here. We bought a waterjet table a couple years ago. It was $120k. It's incredible, you tell it piece shape, size, number, whatever, it cuts a 16x24 sheet of product into amazing designs. Push button, get cut pastries.
Until someone hits the USB port where you upload programs and snaps it off. Custom piece. $85. 3 days downtime.
Or one of the stepper motors goes bad. Also custom. $750. 4 days from Spain.
The water filter has to be replaced monthly. $60.
Someone dropped a stack of pans on one of the cutting surfaces, it's a removable metal frame with very thin blades crisscrossing. $600.
The nozzles for it are $40 apiece. They last about 10 hours.
At 1000 hours, the pump requires a full rebuild. $10,000 in parts and labor to have someone do that.
Jesus.
I would like some money because these are artisanal nuggets of wisdom philistine.
add in payroll taxes as well i suppose, maybe another $5k
but we're not approaching $50k/employee
Oooo employee costing.
So we'll take the $12 an hour base.
Then we have to add in fringe (benefits and taxes). About 30% for a US Company that only gives the minimal amount of fucks to keep employees.
Then we have overhead, roughly 20%.
Then we have G&A, roughly 7% for a manufacturing company.
12*1.30*1.20*1.07
Burdened labor rate is $20.03
20.03*1944= ~39k per person.
drops the mic.
+1
SixCaches Tweets in the mainframe cyberhexRegistered Userregular
Why do unfunny vendors always try to make me laugh and also always call when I email asking for details they have to email?
@six is it a salesman or rep rule you have to call cause I just want an email. One guy yesterday called all three of my phones just to say he was emailing and then his email was slow
I said ok email me and hung up
It's probably some rule for inside sales. A real rep would just email you, but a real rep is also building a relationship with you. This guy wants you to agree to a meeting so he can move on.
Anyone who won't leave you alone doesn't know what they're doing or is pushing something where that doesn't matter.
I have one vendor going so hard in the paint for our printer business but we have 25 months left on our 5 year lease. He claims he's done buyouts up to FOUR YEARS out... but every other company has told me 12-15 months is max.
I finally agreed to let him meet with me again. He's been bugging me nonstop for years, I swear to god.
I hate dealing with vendors. Luckily my company has no interest in purchasing really so I just do other things mostly!
Those kind of people don't sound super fun to deal with.
The ones that make it higher know what they;re doing and can be awesome. Or worse.
I would be an excellent salesman because I am
#1 fun
#2 get to the point, I use few words and don't babble
#3 know my shiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit or learn it
#4 listen
hm maybe I should be an inside sales person after all. the devil doth tempt.
#4 should be #1 and also #2.
When I did sales a lot of what I did was more of a consultative role. Lots of listening, asking questions for clarification rather than assuming and so on. But I also only did very long sales cycle stuff. If my stuff closed in six months then I'd be worried things were rushed.
This is what a good sales rep does and is pretty hard to do well among everything else they need to do. Managing a territory is basically running a subsidiary or franchise business.
and you're all doing the thing where you line item every aspect of one side and only consider the initial purchase cost of the other side
robot employees require maintenance
in a dusty warehouse, probably constant maintenance
Dang, I have relevant experience here. We bought a waterjet table a couple years ago. It was $120k. It's incredible, you tell it piece shape, size, number, whatever, it cuts a 16x24 sheet of product into amazing designs. Push button, get cut pastries.
Until someone hits the USB port where you upload programs and snaps it off. Custom piece. $85. 3 days downtime.
Or one of the stepper motors goes bad. Also custom. $750. 4 days from Spain.
The water filter has to be replaced monthly. $60.
Someone dropped a stack of pans on one of the cutting surfaces, it's a removable metal frame with very thin blades crisscrossing. $600.
The nozzles for it are $40 apiece. They last about 10 hours.
At 1000 hours, the pump requires a full rebuild. $10,000 in parts and labor to have someone do that.
Jeez this is getting expensive
Are you sure I can't just pay someone else to run a sweatshop and handle all these expenses for me using underpaid labor overseas
and you're all doing the thing where you line item every aspect of one side and only consider the initial purchase cost of the other side
robot employees require maintenance
in a dusty warehouse, probably constant maintenance
Dang, I have relevant experience here. We bought a waterjet table a couple years ago. It was $120k. It's incredible, you tell it piece shape, size, number, whatever, it cuts a 16x24 sheet of product into amazing designs. Push button, get cut pastries.
Until someone hits the USB port where you upload programs and snaps it off. Custom piece. $85. 3 days downtime.
Or one of the stepper motors goes bad. Also custom. $750. 4 days from Spain.
The water filter has to be replaced monthly. $60.
Someone dropped a stack of pans on one of the cutting surfaces, it's a removable metal frame with very thin blades crisscrossing. $600.
The nozzles for it are $40 apiece. They last about 10 hours.
At 1000 hours, the pump requires a full rebuild. $10,000 in parts and labor to have someone do that.
sounds like you should fire the human workforce at your plant because it's costing you stupid amounts of money to fix their fuckups
not a doctor, not a lawyer, examples I use may not be fully researched so don't take out of context plz, don't @ me
add in payroll taxes as well i suppose, maybe another $5k
but we're not approaching $50k/employee
Oooo employee costing.
So we'll take the $12 an hour base.
Then we have to add in fringe (benefits and taxes). About 30% for a US Company that only gives the minimal amount of fucks to keep employees.
Then we have overhead, roughly 20%.
Then we have G&A, roughly 7% for a manufacturing company.
12*1.30*1.20*1.07
Burdened labor rate is $20.03
20.03*1944= ~39k per person.
Just make robots to fix robots and also have a robot hr department and robot payroll.
*rubs hands together frogramishly*
+1
Blameless Cleric An angel made of sapphires each more flawlessly cut than the last Registered Userregular
eeuughhh there are people in my shop very very very slowly wandering around and very loudly talking about reiki and crystal healing as "way better than the doctor" for this pregnant lady's baby which is like
I'm stealing a sailboat with a water filter. That should be able to last me a while.
You haven't watched Fear The Walking Dead.
That plan will fail.
Why does it fail on the show? Is it because they don't know how to live on a boat? Because I know how to do that.
Because you can't just live off fish. You'll need other nutrients. You might be able to stick with bull kelp and seaweed but your sodium intake is going to skyrocket.
Which means if you want something besides fish and desalinated water you're going to have to make port somewhere, which is a risk.
Also radar and sonar isn't going to stop working, so anyone else with a boat is going to be able to find you. If it's just you, you're not going to be able to keep a solid watch.
You're in a confined space with limited firepower in the middle of the ocean.
Then, you have tropical storms, which aside from your instruments (which are hopefully solar powered) you won't be able to predict all that well.
are YOU on the beer list?
0
zepherinRussian warship, go fuck yourselfRegistered Userregular
add in payroll taxes as well i suppose, maybe another $5k
but we're not approaching $50k/employee
Oooo employee costing.
So we'll take the $12 an hour base.
Then we have to add in fringe (benefits and taxes). About 30% for a US Company that only gives the minimal amount of fucks to keep employees.
Then we have overhead, roughly 20%.
Then we have G&A, roughly 7% for a manufacturing company.
12*1.30*1.20*1.07
Burdened labor rate is $20.03
20.03*1944= ~39k per person.
drops the mic.
there i win
This is the internet. Did you really win?
0
Blameless Cleric An angel made of sapphires each more flawlessly cut than the last Registered Userregular
"I talked to my OB and he didn't even KNOW about reiki. I almost didn't keep my next appointment..." (other woman nods sympathetically)
"I talked to my OB and he didn't even KNOW about reiki. I almost didn't keep my next appointment..." (other woman nods sympathetically)
is this real life????
The answer is always "Yes".
0
SixCaches Tweets in the mainframe cyberhexRegistered Userregular
I'm not even exactly sure what you all were debating. It seems to be the specific cost within a relatively narrow range for a piece of machinery to be cost effective for replacing an employee.
But that can't be right.
That would be a ridiculous argument to have.
can you feel the struggle within?
+1
amateurhourOne day I'll be professionalhourThe woods somewhere in TennesseeRegistered Userregular
Where's SKFM to come in and tell us we're all expendable and then fire us to increase a christmas bonus.
and you're all doing the thing where you line item every aspect of one side and only consider the initial purchase cost of the other side
robot employees require maintenance
in a dusty warehouse, probably constant maintenance
Dang, I have relevant experience here. We bought a waterjet table a couple years ago. It was $120k. It's incredible, you tell it piece shape, size, number, whatever, it cuts a 16x24 sheet of product into amazing designs. Push button, get cut pastries.
Until someone hits the USB port where you upload programs and snaps it off. Custom piece. $85. 3 days downtime.
Or one of the stepper motors goes bad. Also custom. $750. 4 days from Spain.
The water filter has to be replaced monthly. $60.
Someone dropped a stack of pans on one of the cutting surfaces, it's a removable metal frame with very thin blades crisscrossing. $600.
The nozzles for it are $40 apiece. They last about 10 hours.
At 1000 hours, the pump requires a full rebuild. $10,000 in parts and labor to have someone do that.
sounds like you should fire the human workforce at your plant because it's costing you stupid amounts of money to fix their fuckups
Which is sort of funny, because I work in an industry that has... regressed? Progressed? Baking went from being entirely done by hand, to almost completely mechanized, and now the "artisan" baking industry has had a massive resurgence.
I'm not even exactly sure what you all were debating. It seems to be the specific cost within a relatively narrow range for a piece of machinery to be cost effective for replacing an employee.
So 40k for replacing a single worker, does the robot do more than one person's work? Does it replace two employees on different shifts?
What are the variables here?
How many shifts is the warehouse open for? Could it be open 24/7?
Seems like if you're doing a 1:1 comparison that a 12/hr worker just barely eeks out above a 50k/yr robot worker. Barely. And only 1. If you start asking the worker to work 10 hour days, not only are you now paying more than the robot, but you're also fucking over your worker because they will not perform as well, so there's some diminishing returns.
What are my rules for this theorycraft, someone help me.
not a doctor, not a lawyer, examples I use may not be fully researched so don't take out of context plz, don't @ me
0
ChanusHarbinger of the Spicy Rooster ApocalypseThe Flames of a Thousand Collapsed StarsRegistered Userregular
add in payroll taxes as well i suppose, maybe another $5k
but we're not approaching $50k/employee
Oooo employee costing.
So we'll take the $12 an hour base.
Then we have to add in fringe (benefits and taxes). About 30% for a US Company that only gives the minimal amount of fucks to keep employees.
Then we have overhead, roughly 20%.
Then we have G&A, roughly 7% for a manufacturing company.
12*1.30*1.20*1.07
Burdened labor rate is $20.03
20.03*1944= ~39k per person.
Posts
we know what you eat
Also Castle your health insurance is $9 bucks a month?
Jesus.
Mine is $120. And even the cheapo plan is like $80.
My deductible is $1200 though and my max oop is $2k. I hit that usually in the first two months thanks to Crohn's meds. And the rebate covers 90% of it.
Some of this is offset though. Like with Yeti coolers they can make like 10K of them before they have to replace the mold. They then crank out another 1K they sell as "blemished" models (that are 100% the same minus some surface imperfections) which offsets the cost of the new mold.
Why does it fail on the show? Is it because they don't know how to live on a boat? Because I know how to do that.
Jesus.
pleasepaypreacher.net
nah
it doesn't make sense in my entire industry because we aren't a 24 hour service
because the customers we serve are not open 24 hours
So we'll take the $12 an hour base.
Then we have to add in fringe (benefits and taxes). About 30% for a US Company that only gives the minimal amount of fucks to keep employees.
Then we have overhead, roughly 20%.
Then we have G&A, roughly 7% for a manufacturing company.
12*1.30*1.20*1.07
Burdened labor rate is $20.03
20.03*1944= ~39k per person.
drops the mic.
This is what a good sales rep does and is pretty hard to do well among everything else they need to do. Managing a territory is basically running a subsidiary or franchise business.
Jeez this is getting expensive
Are you sure I can't just pay someone else to run a sweatshop and handle all these expenses for me using underpaid labor overseas
sounds like you should fire the human workforce at your plant because it's costing you stupid amounts of money to fix their fuckups
I don't know your vertical, but if no one is serving 24 hours, sounds like a market space ripe for expanding into.
there i win
*rubs hands together frogramishly*
HMMMMMMM
I'd love it if you took a look at my art and my PATREON!
Because you can't just live off fish. You'll need other nutrients. You might be able to stick with bull kelp and seaweed but your sodium intake is going to skyrocket.
Which means if you want something besides fish and desalinated water you're going to have to make port somewhere, which is a risk.
Also radar and sonar isn't going to stop working, so anyone else with a boat is going to be able to find you. If it's just you, you're not going to be able to keep a solid watch.
You're in a confined space with limited firepower in the middle of the ocean.
Then, you have tropical storms, which aside from your instruments (which are hopefully solar powered) you won't be able to predict all that well.
is this real life????
I'd love it if you took a look at my art and my PATREON!
tough negotiation on promotion
I want a 10% raise, an extra week of vacay, AND the double quilted
yeah, that's the thing about lights out automation
it's not just that you can work 24 hours, it's often that you have to and it has to be economical to do so
the line start-up costs on some of this shit is steep
The answer is always "Yes".
But that can't be right.
That would be a ridiculous argument to have.
that poor child
it isn't though
they have implemented a new employee development plan thing at work
i am now trying to come up with goals
what is this shit
I know not this reference
I'd love it if you took a look at my art and my PATREON!
Which is sort of funny, because I work in an industry that has... regressed? Progressed? Baking went from being entirely done by hand, to almost completely mechanized, and now the "artisan" baking industry has had a massive resurgence.
well, yes
what other kind of argument have we ever had here
What are the variables here?
How many shifts is the warehouse open for? Could it be open 24/7?
Seems like if you're doing a 1:1 comparison that a 12/hr worker just barely eeks out above a 50k/yr robot worker. Barely. And only 1. If you start asking the worker to work 10 hour days, not only are you now paying more than the robot, but you're also fucking over your worker because they will not perform as well, so there's some diminishing returns.
What are my rules for this theorycraft, someone help me.
i said i did didn't i
Is she giving birth to Goyim?
Is she giving birth to Gillian Anderson?
yeah holy crap
I'd love it if you took a look at my art and my PATREON!
I do that every year.
Goal 1: Take a class in something
Goal 2: Take another class
Goal 1: Generate Goals
Report: Goal Achieved.